If you are a regular user of windows and have switched to linux recently, then sure you are going to miss some important things from your windows machine. One such things is those beautiful fonts which you have used in windows.

Method 1:
For installing these fonts there various methods available one among them is as below,

* Install a Cab Extract Utility for Linux. Get it from http://www.cabextract.org.uk/
* Download the Latest msttcorefonts spec from http://corefonts.sourceforge.net/
* If you have RPM Build environment in your home directory, then go ahead with the command. rpmbuild -bb msttcorefonts-2.0-1.spec
* Install the newly built rpm using the following command rpm -ivh <> * Once done, log off & log in or restart the xfs service using the command /sbin/service xfs reload

Use touch to change a file’s timestamp without modifying its contents. Give the name of the file to be changed as an argument. The default action is to change the timestamp to the current time.

* To change the timestamp of file `nikesh’ to the current date and time, type:

$ touch nikesh

To specify a timestamp other than the current system time, use the `-d’ option, followed by the date and time that should be used enclosed in quote characters. You can specify just the date, just the time, or both.

* To change the timestamp of file `nikesh’ to `17 May 2006 14:16′, type:

There are six ‘control bits’ defined in TCP, one or more of which is defined in each packet. The control bits are ‘SYN’, ‘ACK’, ‘PSH’, ‘URG’, ‘RST’, and ‘FIN’. TCP uses these bits to define the purpose and contents of a packet.

SYN bit is used in establishing a TCP connection to synchronize the sequence numbers between both endpoints.

ACK bit is used to acknowledge the remote host’s sequence numbers, declaring that the information in the acknowledgment field is valid.

PSH flag is set on the sending side, and tells the TCP stack to flush all buffers and send any outstanding data up to and including the data that had the PSH flag set. When the receiving TCP sees the PSH flag, it too must flush its buffers and pass the information up to the application.

URG bit indicates that the urgent pointer field has a valid pointer to data that should be treated urgently and be transmitted before non-urgent data.

1. If you integrate vsftpd with xinetd, you can use xinetd to bind to several different IP addresses. For each IP address, get xinetd to launch vsftpd with a different config file. This way, you can get different behavior per virtual address.

2. Alternatively, run as many copies as vsftpd as necessary, in standalonemode. Use “listen_address=x.x.x.x” to set the virtual IP.

Just another note about restoring the boot loader for dual boot systems, after Windows messes it up. In Linux, the “dd” command can read and write to/from raw disks and files. If you have a floppy drive, creating a boot disk is as simple as putting a floppy in the drive and typing this:

[You need to use "root" account to do following]

# dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/fd0 bs=512 count=1

This makes an exact copy of the MBR of the first hard drive (hda - you need to replace this), copying it to a floppy disk. You can boot directly from this floppy, and see your old boot menu. You can restore it by switching the “if=” and “of=” (input file, output file) parameters.

If you don’t have a floppy drive, you can back it up to a file with this:

# dd if=/dev/hda of=/home/nik/boot.mbr bs=512 count=1

Then you can boot into a CD-ROM distribution such as Knoppix, or often use your Linux distribution’s installation CD to boot into rescue mode and restore it with:

# dd if=/mnt/hda5/nik/boot.mbr of=/dev/hda bs=512 count=1

(you’ll need to find and mount the partition containing the directory where you backed up the MBR).

Suppose remote computer is “192.168.1.171″ and has the account “don”. You wantto “keep in sync” the files under “/home/Logs” on the remote computer with files on “/home/nikesh/Server” on the local computer.

$ rsync -Lae ssh don@192.168.1.171:/home/Logs /home/nikesh/Server

“rsync” is a convient command for keeping files in sync, and as shown above, it will workthrough ssh. The -L option tells rsync to treat symbolic links like ordinary files.

The pam_smbpass PAM module can be used to sync users’ Samba passwords with their system passwords. If a user invokes the passwdcommand, the password he uses to log in to the system as well as the password he must provide to connect to a Samba share are changed.

To enable this feature, add the following line to /etc/pam.d/system-auth below the pam_cracklib.so invocation: